Two Politico reporters, Fred Barbash and David Marsh, posted a story last night that quoted four presidential historians on Sarah Palin’s choice as Jon McCain’s running mate. The piece’s headline, “Scholars question Palin’s credentials,” leads one to believe that the historians were critical of the choice. But only one was actually critical, Dr. Matthew Dalleck of Virginia Tech University.

Says Dalleck:

“I think she is the most inexperienced person on a major-party ticket in modern history,” “It would be one thing if she had only been governor for a year and a half, but prior to that she had not had major experience in public life,” Dallek said of Palin. “The fact that he would have to go to somebody who is clearly unqualified to be president makes Obama look like an elder statesman.”

In history, huh? Well Dallek shows his partisan side with this whopper:

“It would be one thing if she had only been governor for a year and a half, but prior to that she had not had major experience in public life,” Dallek said of Palin. “The fact that he would have to go to somebody who is clearly unqualified to be president makes Obama look like an elder statesman.”

It’s likely Dallek is a Democrat as he wrote speeches for Dick Gephart. A skilled historian and on faculty at Virginia Tech its alarming that he would be so narrow in his criticism that’s both misleading and inaccurate.

But Dallek was the only one who was so pointed in his comments. Two other respected historians, both donors to Democrats were more measured and scholarly in their comments.

David Kennedy merely said that Palin is a wild card. And Doris Kearns-Goodwin said that if Palin had been around two teram as a govenor it would have been an incredible choice. This is hardly critical.

So why the misleading headline? Its unlikely that Barash and Marsh wrote it and it was done by editors at Politico and does indeed indicate that a number of presidential historians were giving a thumbs down to the Palin pick and it wasn’t the case.

So not only did Politico editors mislead readers, they cut their reporters off at the knees. Barash and Marsh did some solid reporting by getting the thoughts of noteworthy presidential historians for an article that sought to put Palin’s selection in the perspective of history. But their editors used their clearly professioanl work to generate a hit piece on Sarah Palin.

Mission accomplished by the partisan hacks at Politico though. Over 100 Google links exists that follow the false narrative.

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Please see.

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And her name is Sarah Palin.

One read of her Wikipedia biography easily leads one to dismiss criticism of her political inexperience. She’s served at what can only be seen as a variety of levels of government which included city council and state commissions. She’s had to lead and make tough choices as both a mayor and govenor. Unlike Obama, she visited the wounded at Landstuhl in July of 2007 lond before she was mentioned as a VP candidate.

She has tremendous approval ratings as govenor from voters yet not so from reporters and legislators.

According to Gregg Erickson of the Alaska Daily News, Palin’s approval rating among reporters and legislators would be “in the teens or twenties

“.

Bage of honor in my book, almost as much as getting an Olbermann worst person in the world award.

Ed Morrissey has more that dispells the criticism of Palin. Morrissey runs some of the numbers here:

….Obama is a US Senator of three years experience, and Palin is a governor of 20 months’ experience. Only Barack Obama has spent two of those three years not in the Senate doing his job but running for President. Before starting his bid, he had a grand total of less than 150 days in session in the Senate. Palin, on the other hand, has run her state for more than triple that time.

Fox liberal commentator Kirsten Powers adds this:

I can’t help wondering if this is a trap. The McCain camp watched and learned as Obama supporters offended Hillary supporters by their treatment of her. The McCainiacs had to know that this group is incapable of behaving, that Palin would bring out their worst instincts

Powers, a former member of the Clinton administration, was and remains critical of the Obama campaign.

Obama’s argument thus far has been that experience isn’t what counts; it’s judgment. By attacking the Republican woman relentlessly on this issue, Democrats are undermining their own man.

The McCain campaign have played their cards brilliantly with both the timing and intrigue of the Palin selection stunned the Democrats and stole the oxygen from Obama’s Thursday night exstravaganza. What’s been even more critical has been the increasing reality that Palin is the real deal and an extroidinary candidate. One commentor said that Palin may prove to be Maddie Hayes to McCain’ s Rooster Cogburn.

A McCain-Palin win nine weeks from Tuesday will vault Palin to the front of the discussion as the Republican Party’s future presidential candidate and one that will prove quite a problem for Hillary Clinton whom Palin saluted in her remarkable speech yesterday.

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After Tuesday’s night’s total meltdown, most expected the same last night. They didn’t and the bullpen held.

Pay no attention to the doomsayers who keep advancing how much of a tragedy it is that the Mets couldn’t win it for Johan Santana. Only Brandon Webb has been a better starter than Santana this season and he has been the ace they wanted when they acquired him. There’s little debate that the Mets wouldn’t be where they are this morning without him.

But it was Dan Murphy again with a big hit last night. Murphy’s debut has been the most stunning debut of any rookie, surpasing Gregg Jefferries 1988 August call-up. Unlike Jefferries, Murphy was unheralded. The 1988 Mets were facing no September challanges as are the current club. Murphy’s playing out of position and is delivering game-winning hits during a pennant race.

You cannot say enough about Carlos Delgado’s post-Randolph surge. There were many who contemplated his outright release at one point. He’s one of the reasons why the Mets have been able to win.

So they’re back in first this morning, and they’re nold folding. The bitterness of last season’s collapse still familar, a special kind of resolve to win has emerged. No matter how bad a loss, the Mets are showing up the next day apparently having washed a previous night’s debacle off in the shower. They won’t be folding this season.

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Rheotical mantras have always been the centerpiece of Dem talking points, and there should come as no surprise that FactCheck was busy last night.

Lets focus on Pennsylvania Govenor Ed Rendell who while was busy calling John McCain a fraud couldn’t help but let loose a classic Dem whopper:

PENNSYLVANIA GOV. ED RENDELL: “And guess who voted with President Bush 90 percent of the time? Sen. John McCain.”

Well not exactly, Ed. From FactCheck:

McCain voted with President Bush 90 percent of the time from January 20, 2001, to when Congress left Washington on its annual August recess, according to a study by Congressional Quarterly. But McCain wasn’t always a staunch Bush backer. In 2005, his support for Bush’s position on legislation reached a low of 77 percent; last year, when he launched his latest bid for the GOP presidential nomination, he voted with Bush 95 percent of the time.

That’s not too bad, Ed. You can probably get awy with that one OK. You guys really have to try and tie McCain to President Bush as you need to hide your own disasterous plans for the country. But lets look at another one of your attempts to mislead folks.

” the fact that top McCain advisers have lobbied for oil and gas companies “explains why he wants to give another $4 billion tax break to oil companies.”Wow.

Ed, you’ve not gotten the memo. Folks aren’t buying the old demonization of the oil companies just so you guys can keep that environmental lobby cash coming to Dem coffers. Anyway, here’s the actual truth, Ed.

The $4 billion in tax breaks for oil companies is part of McCain’s plan to reduce corporate taxes overall and does not represent an additional tax benefit for these companies. The corporate reduction McCain has proposed would apply to all corporations, including oil companies.

Keep depending on an uninformed public, Ed. The conserivaive blogospere can handle it.

H/T: The Washington Times and FactCheck.org

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According to Stanley Kurtz, this is indeed the case:

Charitable foundations often move far to the left of the intentions of their original donors. The community activist groups that got money from the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, like ACORN and the Developing Communities Project (part of the Gamaliel Foundation), were very radical indeed, and the personal views of Walter Annenberg don’t change that fact one iota.

Today is the day that Kurtz will be able to view the Annenberg Challenge files that the Daley Library of U of I - Chicago initially balked allowing him to see.

Its curious that while the Obama campaign is trying to suppress a Republican 527 from airing an Ayers ad, they used Ayers in their own ads. A collective, “you’ve got to be kidding me,” is coming from the conservative blogosphere. Here’s numerous links from Just One Minute.

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Despite signed agreements and promisses made to world leaders in prson, Russian armor - backed units still man check-points inside Georgia. Their heavy presence in the critical port city of Poti shows they want to blockage trade. From William D. Zeranski in the American Thinker comes this:

The port city of Poti is a strategic site and has undergone a $200 million port development project. Russian soldiers have set up check points and continuingly patrol the city. “Russian forces also set up a checkpoint near Senaki, the home of a major military base in western Georgia,” and far deeper in the interior of the Georgia nation.

If setting up multiple check points and categorizing large swaths of land as security zones is the Russian government’s interpretation of compliance, the US and the West better start advancing their own game of compliance before Georgia is “complianced” out of existence.

We must stand firm against the Russians. I understand that Dick Cheney is visiting soon. While humanitarian help is relatively easy, we will have to do more. And some will be heavy lifting. Initially it will be re-arming the Georgians and re-arming them with the very best anti-tank and hand held SAM missles. Somehow I believe these have already been provided. These will let the Russains know they will be hit back and hit back hard. If needed, more will come.

The port of Poli will need to be reopend and put back into the hands of the Georgians. The presence of a coalition of navy ships of the Georgian coast will ensure this. With the Ukrainians signalling an end to the Russian navy’s use of their Black Sea port, NATO ships can change the balance of power.

Ultimately, it must be us and our willing allies to do this. But it must be done or the Russians will move again to change the world to a place we do not want our children and their children to live.

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Captain Ed Morrissey does just that with his post this morning in Hot Air. Says Morrissey:

Mitt Romney, a former Governor, may be best positioned of all, though, on the economy. If Romney gets selected for McCain’s running mate, he will be the only one of the four principals who has actually run a business, and run it successfully. He knows more about economic policy in both academic and practical terms than any of them, and hits Barack Obama in his key strength among voters.

Michigan is in play as it is, but as Morrissey points out, even more so with Romney.

Romney (and Pawlenty and Blunt) also have another quality that Joe Biden lacks: potential to deliver battleground states. Speculation about Michigan appears to have a solid basis in fact. In May, Survey USA tested a McCain/Romney ticket against several different iterations of an Obama ticket. Surprisingly, it beat every single possibility, but was especially strong against an Obama/Biden ticket:
vs Obama/Biden: +18
vs Obama/Clinton: +5
vs Obama/Gore: +5
vs Obama/(John) Edwards : +3

I’ve also heard that Romeny’s addition on the ticket benefits in Nevada and (I cannot believe this one) California. Romney will be terrific as an attack dog and will prove to be more presidential to voters than either Obama or Biden. His success in the private sector coupled with executive experience as a govenor of a large and important state puts his resume at the top.

I think I can speak for many republicans that in the event he is chosen, it will prompt a collective sigh of relief like no other past republican VP ever has.

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Bradley that is. You remember the one. The former NY Knick great who became a US Senator and a respected one at that. He even ran for president once, but somehow you could tell he wasn’t really up to it. Maybe the ego just big enough.

Bill Bradley if you can remember was one of the first Democrats of note to endorse Barack Obama. The old Knick said it was the Obama superior judgement.

Where’s Bill been lately?

At the time of the Bradley endorsement, no vetting had occured. I wonder if Bradley knew about Bill Ayers or Jeremiah Wright. Did he know about the Annenberg money? He had to know that Obama was a product of the Chicago Dem machine, but probably knew little of the details.

Would Bradley have suggested his old Senate collegue, Joe Biden?

We ‘ve not heard from Bill Bradley but I’d sure like to know what he thinks of his endorsement now.

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From his own blog, Maoist Michael Klonsky boasts of the success of his Annenberg funded Small Schools Workshop. From a link titled “Social Justice Schools: The magazine “The Nation” generates the story titled, “The Concious Classroom,” the story of Little Village Lawndale High School located on the Chicago West Side.

Positioned among smoky factories and aging row houses on Chicago’s West Side, the immaculate Little Village Lawndale High School (LVLHS) serves as a constant reminder to community residents of what collective action can produce. Concerned that 70 percent of neighborhood students traveled to different parts of the city for high school, parents organized vigorously for the construction of a new facility in their backyard. After initially approving the plans, city officials stalled construction, claiming that funds had to be diverted to other projects. In response, the community redoubled its efforts, culminating in a nineteen-day hunger strike at the site of the proposed building, referred to by supporters as Camp Cesar Chavez. “Construyan la escuela ahora!” was the protesters’ battle cry, and after six long years, the school was opened as promised in 2005.

Aside from the beautiful building, the struggle birthed a new educational environment for Little Village’s youth. “The parents kept saying they really wanted our school to teach the values of peace and struggle,” says Rito Martinez, the principal of Social Justice High School at LVLHS, “and what the community had to do to fight for the school.” One of four small schools housed on the campus, Martinez’s social justice school was specifically created to foster basic skills and literacy–as well as critical inquiry–through projects and problems centered on race, gender and economic equity. “There’s a combination of self-awareness and the opportunity to become socially conscious,” he says. “We’re not dogmatic about it…but we give them the opportunity for self-discovery.”

On a fall morning a week into the school year, it’s clear that the school’s methodology excites the students of LVLHS, 98 percent of whom qualify as low-income. It’s Wednesday, which means the kids participate in extended teacher-generated colloquiums focusing on topics that allow students to explore their identity in an academic setting. In a section on student organizing, thirteen high schoolers attempt to define the word “community,” brainstorming about their city’s assets and problems and how the students can tackle an issue of importance to them. Down the hall, an enthusiastic teacher focusing on ethnography leads a lively discussion about racial stereotypes in the media as an entree into the idea of hegemony. Hands pop up across the packed classroom as students argue about how advertisements influence the way society views larger populations. As Martinez notes, providing students the flexibility to “explore learning” is something that’s generally offered only to kids in affluent districts, yet the practice can be transformational.

While the history of LVLHS’s genesis is unique, its approach is not; the movement to link education, social justice and activism is appealing to a growing number of educators and community organizations around the country. Updating successful principles from liberatory education programs of the past, teachers and community members are finding exciting ways to engage a new generation of urban students alienated by mainstream methodologies, something countless reform efforts have thus far failed to accomplish. And as Congress moves to reform or scrap the No Child Left Behind Act, legislators could benefit from studying these new techniques, which have been largely ignored on a national scale.

Back to the Future

Much of the work that now falls under the social justice education umbrella is grounded in a rich educational lineage dating back more than forty years. Among the intellectual forebears is Brazilian educator Paulo Freire, author of the landmark 1970 book Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Freire described traditional education as “suffering from narration sickness,” in which the hierarchical relationship between teacher and student causes the former to deposit facts into the latter without cultivating an understanding of what those facts mean. He argues that only through a dialectical praxis, or “reflection and action upon the world in order to transform it,” will students develop the critical skills necessary to realize their potential as scholars and citizens.

Another equally important influence is the Freedom School movement of the 1960s. In 1964 various civil rights organizations created a network of free alternative summer schools in Mississippi as a means to end the political marginalization of black people by encouraging students to become active in their communities. Divided between an “academic curriculum” that used reading, verbal and writing activities based on the student’s own experiences and a “citizenship curriculum” that allowed for discussions about each student’s role in the Jim Crow South, the course work was demanding. But more than 3,000 black students of all ages attended that summer, demonstrating the program’s appeal.

Twenty-first-century social justice education builds on these models while also emphasizing dialogue and remaining attentive to each student’s social environment. “Taking kids’ lives as a point of departure and bringing the world into the classroom really does seem to give a context and a purpose that is very motivating,” says Stan Karp, a veteran English teacher and an editor of the Milwaukee-based education reform magazine Rethinking Schools.

Conservatives, with the New York Sun and City Journal leading the charge, have denounced the movement for indoctrinating public school students with leftist politics at the expense of general education. But successful social justice education ensures that teachers strike a balance between debating sociopolitical problems that affect children’s lives and teaching them academic basics on which they will be tested. A science teacher can plant an urban garden, allowing students to learn about plant biology, the imbalance in how fresh produce is distributed and how that affects the health of community residents. An English teacher can explore misogyny or materialism in American culture through the lens of hip-hop lyrics. Or as Rico Gutstein, a professor of mathematics education at the University of Illinois, Chicago, suggests, a math teacher can run probability simulations using real data to understand the dynamics behind income inequality or racial profiling. These are “examples of lessons where you can really learn the math basics,” he says, “but the purpose of learning the math actually becomes an entree into, and a deeper understanding of, the political ramifications of the issue.”

Such practical exercises, advocates argue, improve upon the standard approach to youth development, which aims to promote individual success but fails to examine the inequities that inhibit it. “At least to expose people to a structural analysis of inequality and the distribution of goodies in society,” says Charles Payne, the Frank P. Hixon Professor at the University of Chicago’s School of Social Service Administration, “seems to be one of the more obvious ways that we can do better than we have done.” If executed properly, social justice education also lays the intellectual foundation so essential for independent analytical thought while providing students the opportunity to realize their own human agency. In this way, urban students are treated not as burdens to their community but as partners in solving the complex problems that plague their neighborhoods.

The Method Spreads

Social justice education has made inroads inside and outside the conventional classroom setting. Since 1992 the Children’s Defense Fund (CDF) has stood at the forefront of this movement, running modern freedom schools in cities nationwide. CDF leaders devised a model curriculum focused on five components: high-quality academic enrichment; parent and family involvement; civic engagement and social action; intergenerational leadership development; and nutrition, physical and mental health. Like their Freedom Summer predecessors, college-age students attend a national training workshop and facilitate coursework at all the schools. Since 1995 more than 64,000 children and families have been involved, including 7,000 children in forty-nine cities in the summer of 2006.

Independent freedom schools have developed as well, each with its own local nuances. In San Francisco, students meet weekly to discuss topics like “Art and Protest” and “Nonviolence and Direct Action.” Chicago youth, upon passing a rigorous application process, are actually paid $1,200 to attend an intensive six-week program that highlights sociopolitical consciousness and movement strategy.

Ironically, the rise of public charter schools, which have been promoted by the right and sometimes resisted by education reformers on the left, has been a boon for social justice education. “I don’t see how that rapid expansion is possible without the proliferation of small schools and charter schools,” says Payne. “They create an institutional opening and a resource base that wasn’t there before.” Public charter status is valuable because funding is still provided by the government, but teachers are granted more autonomy to experiment with material that some may deem too controversial in standard settings. In New York City alone, more than fifteen charter schools have opened with explicit social justice themes, many of them in the past five years. Chicago, Los Angeles and Oakland have followed suit.

With more education schools assigning the works of Freire and Jonathan Kozol, a growing number of teachers, with the help of local teachers’ organizations, are infusing their curriculums with liberatory theories too. One such group is the New York Collective of Radical Educators (NYCORE), an organization of past and present public school teachers founded in 2002 that gives teachers the chance to discuss larger issues of social justice while formulating ways to bring those topics into the classroom. “We find that there are a lot of teachers who are highly politicized, but they are isolated in schools where they are being forced to implement curriculum or policies that are really antithetical to their own belief system,” says Bree Picower, a NYCORE member and an assistant professor at New York University’s Department of Teaching & Learning. “And we look to try and network those teachers.” Teachers 4 Social Justice (T4SJ), a similar group in Chicago, holds an annual curriculum fair where teachers can exchange lesson plans as well as tactics on the best way to teach about injustice in schools that don’t explicitly support such activity. “You have to be careful. You have to build allies,” says Gutstein, a co-founder of the Chicago T4SJ. “But the reality is that there’s always space. There’s always cracks.”

Perhaps most encouraging, liberatory education advocates from diverse parts of the country are beginning the slow process of organizing. “Oftentimes it’s individuals or individual institutions doing their own work,” says Tara Mack, director of the Education for Liberation Network. “And it’s one of these things where you look up and realize that there are actually a lot of different people who share similar values but haven’t necessarily connected with each other.” Mack’s burgeoning organization–an outgrowth of a listserv of educators, academics and researchers–planned and ran Free Minds, Free People, what many have called one of the most productive social justice education conferences to date. More than 400 participants from across the country convened at LVLHS in June and ran panels, shared resources and discussed the best way to build institutional strength. Other networking groups are budding as well, including Education Action!, a nonprofit created by Jonathan Kozol, and the Teachers Activist Group, a national association attempting to align local organizations like NYCORE and T4SJ.

Breaking Into the Mainstream

In part, the growing interest in social justice education can be attributed to a kind of Bush backlash. Surging inequality and further disinvestment from urban cores to offset tax cuts and military spending have given teachers and activists the impetus to speak frankly to kids about ideas of fairness and justice, even if the President’s No Child Left Behind Act has limited curriculum flexibility. “I think it’s the…polarization that you see,” says Gutstein. “People are talking about things in ways which I don’t think I’ve heard since the 1970s, and that includes education.”

But blaming the current Administration misses a larger point. Social justice education is a pedagogy that’s reinvigorating educators frustrated with the ineffectiveness of longstanding reform efforts. Despite new focus on the “soft bigotry of low expectations,” many urban students remain deeply alienated from traditional methods that seem so removed from their lives. The links between academic and financial success are tenuous at best, and command-and-control testing ignores the critical skills needed to improve the communities that the private sector and government have all but abandoned. In this context, focusing on structural inequality and human development is a compelling alternative.

While difficult to quantify empirically because much of the work is new and geographically localized, the pedagogy has shown humble signs of success. One Philliber Research Associates study found that the reading ability of 1,598 children who attend CDF Freedom School programs in Kansas City “significantly improved,” outdistancing similar students, irrespective of whether or not they attended summer enrichment programs. Of the attendees, low-income middle schoolers made the greatest gains. And as those interviewed point out, the anecdotal evidence from students, teachers and parents is overwhelming. “We’re rethinking these educational practices across the board,” says Mia Henry, director of the Chicago Freedom School. “Because everyone is trying to find a way to do it right.”

Social justice education, while growing in influence, has not yet entered the majority of mainstream education-reform conversations. Hunger strikes and protests like those at Little Village Lawndale High School may speed along the process. But if students remain engaged and educators continue to experiment and improve on their methods, it should be only a matter of time.

.

Stunning not only in its focus but its arrogance, Mike Klonsky’s Chicago HS was priliminarily known as Camp Ceasar Chavez after the leftist organizer of illegal allien growers in California of the 60’s and 70’s. But there’s more. At Lawndale HS and English teacher is encouraged to explore mysoginy and materialism in America through hip hop music. Or maybe a math teacher can explore income inequities based on racial profiling. All are highlites mak public school curriculum based on making America seem evil. And all funded through Obama/Ayers efforts to control curriculum and indoctrinate Chicago youth.

But again there’s more. The Lawndale model is intended to be used in other cities to start Charter Schools, an Obama favorite. His agenda is revealed here as many observers, including this one took Obama at his word he would be championing school choice in larger cities where public schools had been failing and many legitimate private entities had begun effective charter efforts in those areas. Little did anyone know, he may well have had the Obama/Ayers Lawndale Model in mind. In San Francisco and New York similar models are already being implemented under the old guise of the 1960’s radicalism, Freedom Schools.

H/T: Commentor Maybee at JOM

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